Wo kann man diesen Film schauen? Eine gute Verfilmung von J. Barries Kindergeschichten um den niemals erwachsen werdenden Peter Pan und seinen Erzfeind Captain Hook sollte in ihrem Publikum möglichst die Sehnsucht wecken, einfach aus dem Fenster springen und losfliegen zu können. Khmer is written with no spaces between words, but lines may only be broken at word boundaries. There are five vowel signs that appear on the key caps, and are considered single letters in the Khmer alphabet, but are not assigned to unicode code points.

They are instead represented by two consecutive vowel sign codes, the glyphs of which combine to make the vowel's glyph, e. The Khmer keyboard map does not send the code pair sequence, however. It sends one officially-unassigned code from the Khmer block. It is up to the running application to recognize these codes and insert the appropriate code pair into the document.

They are as follows:. The less frequently used characters are accessed by the Shift key. Despite their wide usage in Thai , Arabic numbers are not present on the main section of the keyboard. Instead they are accessed via the numeric keypad or by switching to the Latin character set on those keyboards without dedicated numeric keys. Beside the Kedmanee layout also the Pattachote layout is used, though it is much less common.

The Sinhala keyboard layout is based on the Wijesekara typewriter for Sinhala script. The layout has been available in Linux since September The Bhutanese Standard for a Dzongkha keyboard layout standardizes the layout for typing Dzongkha , and other languages using the Tibetan script, in Bhutan.

The Dzongkha keyboard layout is very easy to learn as the key sequence essentially follows the order of letters in the Dzongkha and Tibetan alphabet. The layout has been available in Linux since For chrome a 1: The Armenian keyboard is similar to the Greek in that in most but not all cases, a given Armenian letter is at the same location as the corresponding Latin letter on the QWERTY keyboard.

The illustrated keyboard layout can be enabled on Linux with: Western and Eastern Armenian have different layouts. After some controversy and a public discussion in , the proposal was not accepted , [68] although it had been already used in several places — the "Bulgarian Phonetic" layout in MS Windows Vista is based on it. The most common keyboard layout in modern Russia is the so-called Windows layout, which is the default Russian layout used in the MS Windows operating system.

The layout was designed to be compatible with the hardware standard in many other countries, but introduced compromises to accommodate the larger alphabet. The full stop and comma symbols share a key, requiring the shift key to be held to produce a comma, despite the high relative frequency of comma in the language. There are some other Russian keyboard layouts in use: The Russian Typewriter layout can be found on many Russian typewriters produced before the s, and it is the default Russian keyboard layout in the OpenSolaris operating system.

Keyboards in Russia always have Cyrillic letters on the keytops as well as Latin letters. Usually Cyrillic and Latin letters are labeled with different colors. The Russian phonetic keyboard layout also called homophonic or transliterated is widely used outside Russia, where normally there are no Russian letters drawn on keyboard buttons. This layout is made for typists who are more familiar with other layouts, like the common English QWERTY keyboard, and follows the Greek and Armenian layouts in placing most letters at the corresponding Latin letter locations.

It is famous among both native speakers and people who use, teach, or are learning Russian, and is recommended — along with the Standard Layout — by the linguists, translators, teachers and students of AATSEEL.

They differ by where a few of the letters are placed. Virtual on-screen Russian keyboards allow entering Cyrillic directly in a browser without activating the system layout. Apart from a set of characters common to most Cyrillic alphabets, the Serbian Cyrillic layout uses six additional special characters unique or nearly unique to the Serbian Cyrillic alphabet: Due to the bialphabetic nature of the language, actual physical keyboards with the Serbian Cyrillic layout printed on the keys are uncommon today.

The Macedonian dze is on this keyboard despite not being used in Serbian Cyrillic. The gje and kje can be typed by striking the apostrophe key then striking the G or K key. However, the capital forms are next to the small forms. An alternative version of the layout is quite different and has no dje or tshe access. This alternative was not supported until Windows Vista. Ukrainian keyboards, based on a slight modification of Russian Standard Layout, often also have the Russian Standard "Windows" layout marked on them, making it easy to switch from one language to another.

The other long-standing problem was the omission of the apostrophe , which is used in Ukrainian almost as commonly as in English though with a different meaning , but which also does not exist in Russian. Both of these problems were resolved with the "improved Ukrainian" keyboard layout for Windows available with Vista and subsequent Windows versions. All keyboards in Georgia are fitted with both Latin and Georgian letters. Greek has two fewer letters than English, but has two accents which, because of their frequency, are placed on the home row at the U.

Word-final sigma has its own position as well, replacing W, and semicolon which is used as a question mark in Greek and colon move to the position of Q. The Greek Polytonic layout has various dead keys to input the accented letters. There is also the Greek layout and the Greek layout. All keyboards in Israel are fitted with both Latin and Hebrew letters. Trilingual editions including either Arabic or Cyrillic also exist. This is shared with Arabic keyboards.

Inuktitut has two similar, though not identical, commonly available keyboard layouts for Windows. Both contain a basic Latin layout in its base and shift states, with a few Latin characters in the AltGr shift states. The Canadian Aboriginal syllabics can be found in the Capslock and AltGr shift states in both layouts as well. The Cherokee language uses an character Syllabary.

The keyboard is available for the iPhone and iPad and is supported by Google. The Tamazight Tamazight Tifinagh standards-compliant layout is optimised for a wide range of Tamazight Berber language variants, and includes support for Tuareg variants. A non-standards-compliant but convenient combined AZERTY-mapped Tifinagh layout exists which also allows typing in Latin script without switching layout:.

All the above layouts were designed by the Universal Amazigh Keyboard Project and are available from there. A compatible, international version of this layout, called "Tifinagh International " exists for typing a wide range of Tamazight Berber language variants, and includes support for Tuareg variants. It was designed by the Universal Amazigh Keyboard Project and is available from there. Various methods have been invented to fit every possibility into a QWERTY keyboard, so East Asian keyboards are essentially the same as those in other countries.

However, their input methods are considerably more complex, without one-to-one mappings between keys and characters. In general, the range of possibilities is first narrowed down often by entering the desired character's pronunciation. Then, if there remains more than one possibility, the desired ideogram is selected, either by typing the number before the character, or using a graphical menu to select it.

The computer assists the typist by using heuristics to guess which character is most likely desired. Although this may seem painstaking, East Asian input methods are today sufficient in that, even for beginners, typing in these languages is only slightly slower than typing English. There are several kana -based typing methods.

See also Japanese language and computers. Chinese has the most complex and varied input methods. Characters can either be entered by pronunciation like Japanese and Hanja in Korean , or by structure.

Most of the structural methods are very difficult to learn but extremely efficient for experienced typists, as there is no need to select characters from a menu. For detailed description, see Chinese input methods for computers. There exist a variety of other, slower methods in which a character may be entered. If the pronunciation of a character is not known, the selection can be narrowed down by giving its component shapes, radicals , and stroke count.

Also, many input systems include a "drawing pad" permitting "handwriting" of a character using a mouse. Finally, if the computer does not have CJK software installed, it may be possible to enter a character directly through its encoding number e.

In contrast to Chinese and Japanese, Korean is typed similarly to Western languages. There exist two major forms of keyboard layouts: While Korean consonants and vowels jamo are grouped together into syllabic grids when written, the script is essentially alphabetical , and therefore typing in Korean is quite simple for those who understand the Korean alphabet Hangul.

Each jamo is assigned to a single key. As the user types letters, the computer automatically groups them into syllabic characters. Given a sequence of jamo , there is only one unambiguous way letters can be validly grouped into syllables, so the computer groups them together as the user types. Apple Keyboards do not have the two extra keys. Consonants occupy the left side of the layout, while vowels are on the right.

It is based on Dr. Kong Byung Woo's earlier work. Numbers are placed in three rows. Syllable-initial consonants are on the right shown green in the picture , and syllable-final consonants and consonant clusters are on the left shown red. Some consonant clusters are not printed on the keyboard; the user has to press multiple consonant keys to input some consonant clusters, unlike Sebeolsik Final. It is more ergonomic than the dubeolsik, but is not in wide use. It is the final Sebulsik layout designed by Dr.

Kong Byung Woo, hence the name. Numbers are placed on two rows. Syllable-initial consonants are on the right, and syllable-final consonants and consonant clusters are on the left. Vowels are in the middle. All consonant clusters are available on the keyboard, unlike the Sebeolsik which does not include all of them. Sebeolsik Noshift is a variant of sebeolsik which can be used without pressing the shift key.

Its advantage is that people with disabilities who cannot press two keys at the same time will still be able to use it to type in Hangul. Without an input method handler activated, these keyboards would simply respond to Latin characters as physically labelled, provided that the US keyboard layout is selected correctly in the operating system. Most modern input methods allow input of both simplified and traditional characters, and will simply default to one or the other based on the locale setting.

The most common IMEs are Hanyu pinyin -based, representing the pronunciation of characters using Latin letters. However, keyboards with labels for alternative structural input methods such as Wubi method can also be found, although those are usually very old products and are extremely rare, as of Computers in Taiwan often use Zhuyin bopomofo style keyboards US keyboards with bopomofo labels , many also with Cangjie method key labels, as Cangjie is a popular method for typing in Traditional Chinese.

The bopomofo style keyboards are in lexicographical order , top-to-bottom left-to-right. The codes of three input methods are typically printed on the Chinese traditional keyboard: Zhuyin upper right ; Cangjie lower left ; and Dayi lower right.

Japanese keyboards are occasionally found, and UK keyboards are rare. For Chinese input, Shape-based input methods such as Cangjie pronounced as ChongKit in Cantonese or Chinese handwriting recognition are the most common input method.

The use of phonetic-based input method is uncommon due to the lack of official standard for Cantonese romanisation and people in Hong Kong almost never learn any romanisation schemes in schools. An advantage of phonetic-based input method is that most Cantonese speakers are able to input Traditional Chinese characters with no particular training at all where they spell out the Cantonese sound of each character without tone marks, e.

However, Microsoft Windows , which is the most popular operating system used in desktops, does not provide any Cantonese phonetic input method, requiring users to find and install third-party input method software. Also, most people find the process of picking characters from a list being too slow due to homonyms so the Cangjie method is generally preferred. Although thorough training and practice are required to use Cangjie , many Cantonese speakers have taken Cangjie input courses because of the fast typing speed availed by the input method.

This method is the fastest because it has the capability to fetch the exact, unambiguous Chinese character which the user has in mind to input, pinpointing to only one character in most cases. This is also the reason why no provision for an input of phonetic accent is needed to complement this Input Method.

The shifted values of many keys digits, together with: For entering Japanese, the most common method is entering text phonetically, as romanized transliterated kana, which are then converted to kanji as appropriate by an input method editor. It is also possible to type kana directly, depending on the mode used.